Christian Mancas

We may earn commissions for purchases made via this page.

Books by Christian Mancas

1
Book Cover of Christian Mancas - Conceptual Data Modeling and Database Design: A Fully Algorithmic Approach, Volume 1: The Shortest Advisable Path

By Christian Mancas – PhD, Associate Professor, Database Architect 

4.51
| Oct 26, 2015 | 698 Pages
Recommended for: 
Beginners & Experts in Data Analysis and Database Design. Beginner to Intermediate readers.
You will:
  • Understand algorithmic approach to data analysis and modeling
  • Learn best practice rules for database design and implementation
  • Discover solutions to real-life data sub-universes
  • Master graphical Entity-Relationship and mathematical EMDM models
  • Explore case studies from simple to complex data scenarios
Reviews:
Algorithmic Approach
Rich Examples
Real-life Exercises
Detailed Explanations
Practical Exercises
Vague Customer Requests
Incomplete Examples
  • 1st in Data Modeling for Beginners
  • 6th in Data Modeling for All Time
  • 2nd in Database Design for Beginners
  • 6th in Database Design for All Time
Bernhard ThalheimWhat Christian Mancas wanted to do is to write the best possible book on real, pragmatic database design available, bar none. He succeeded. . . This book will find its way into the literature on database design and development. It has a good number of ideas that must be considered in any design task. It uses a sample-based approach and is thus easy to understand. It supports digestion due to nice exercises. And, finally, it discusses in detail also the result of a design in different DBMS languages. So, a reader can be sure that the book guides to the right track
Cristian CaludeModern scientific and business challenges, the proliferation of personal computers and intelligent gadgets, the Internet and industries' large amounts of data, all fuel a huge need for database management systems. The book by C. Mancas is an excellent introduction to pragmatic database design and development. Presented in a gentle manner, with many examples, the book is suited to a large category of readers, from computer science and engineering students to the practitioners of the domain
Andra HugoOne of the biggest problems in nowadays applications is the management of data. Analyzing and structuring large amounts of data relies on understanding and being able to describe its properties and constraints. Professor Christian Mancas's exceptionally well-documented work, A Conceptual Data Modeling and Database Design, gives the basic insights of the database models and their importance as a foundation for the complex applications. This book guides the reader throughout real-life scenarios, providing essential software engineering advice. Indeed, by addressing some of the problems people usually encounter when designing a database, Professor Mancas pedagogically connects the end user's requirements to the notions of entities and relations between them. Meanwhile, the mathematical analysis and proofs sustain the theoretical background of the statements and provide a complete view of the possible algorithmic optimizations. The first volume, A Fully Algorithmic Approach: The Shortest Advisable Path, represents an important contribution in the learning process as it advocates best practice rules in database designs with clear explanations and practical exercises. This first volume mainly presents Professor Mancas's point of view of the database design state of the art (enriched with his main original contributions to the E-RDM and RDM). I am looking forward to the second volume of this book that will mainly present his most important contribution to the conceptual data modeling and database design: his (Elementary) Mathematical Data Model [(E)MDM], as well as MatBase, his KDBMS prototype based on both (E)MDM, E-RDM, RDM, and Datalog
Dan SuciuCovers the classical data management topics that any computer professional should master. . . . This volume is a gentle yet rigorous and extensive introduction to the main topics in data management, with concrete examples on several popular database systems. There are lots of detailed examples, and each concept is covered in detail, and from several perspectives, using alternative definitions or notations where needed. The book ensures that no reader is left behind, and all potential questions are answered. . . . Best suited for the practitioner who wants to achieve a thorough understanding of the fundamental concepts in data management. . . . This volume is an important first step in understanding the complexities of data today
|Read Amazon reviews |Rate or write a review